News Release Number: STScI-1999-28

The full news release story:

Exciting new images of more than a dozen very distant colliding galaxies
have been obtained by a European-led team of astronomers using the
NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. These colliding objects are part of a
large concentration of galaxies, a galaxy cluster. Though collisions
have been observed in other clusters, this particular cluster displays
by far the largest number ever seen. To astronomers, the finding
indicates that, at least in some cases, big massive galaxies form
through collisions between smaller ones, in a "generation after
generation" never-ending story.

The Hubble Space Telescope studied 81 galaxies in the galaxy cluster
MS1054-03, 13 of which are remnants of recent collisions or pairs of
colliding galaxies. The 10-meter W.M. Keck Telescope was used to select
these 81 cluster galaxies.

The cluster is 8 billion light-years away, one of the most distant known
so far and thus a key target for astronomers facing the problem of how
galaxies formed when the universe was young. The cluster's light has
taken so long to reach us that astronomers see it now as it was when the
universe was less than half its present age.

"It has been a real surprise," says team leader Pieter van Dokkum, from
Groningen and Leiden universities (The Netherlands). "Collisions had
never been observed before at this frequency. Many of the collisions
involve very massive galaxies, and the end result will be even more
massive galaxies."

Although during the collision the stars in the galaxies do not run into
each other, their orbits are strongly disturbed by huge tidal forces
caused by the gravitational pull. As a result, the "parent" galaxies
lose their shape and smoother galaxies are formed. Clearly defined
spiral galaxies, for instance, produce large featureless elliptical
galaxies. The whole merging process can take less than a billion years,
a relatively short time scale in astronomy.

"The Hubble image shows the paired galaxies very close together, with
distorted morphologies," explains Marijn Franx, from the University of
Leiden. "We can even see streams of stars being pulled out of the
galaxies. They are old stars in a young galaxy."

The finding will appear in the August 1 issue of Astrophysical
Journal Letters. To the authors it strongly supports a Big Bang model
prediction that says that large galaxies were formed from smaller ones
in many generations of mergers. It contradicts the idea that there was,
in the past, a kind of 'galaxy boom' event in which all big massive
galaxies were born at the same time.

As Franx states, "the evidence for the theories of galaxy formation
through collisions had been strong, but circumstantial. Here we finally
see a large number of galaxies caught in the act. If observed in other
distant clusters, it would represent a general confirmation for a
crucial aspect of our galaxy formation theories."

Collisions are much rarer today than they were in the past, but not
impossible. Our own spiral galaxy, the Milky Way, is currently "eating
up" several small satellite galaxies. Within 5 to 10 billion years 
some computer simulations show  the Milky Way may collide with the
Andromeda galaxy, and the result would be an elliptical galaxy.